Tutorial: List Actions

List Actions

List Views may have what is called List Actions. Basically it treats every row as an actionable item so that tapping that row's icon displays a context-sensitive action ribbon below that row. As an example you may have a List view of Service Tickets, you could then define a list action bar with actions like "Close Ticket", "Delete Ticket" and "Call Customer".

The context-sensitive portion refers to the fact that the actions will have access to that rows data, most importantly the $key of that row.

Layout

Defining List Actions is very similar to toolbars and layouts for views, it takes place within the createActionLayout() function and it returns and defines the this.actions array:

enabled - determines the enabled/disabled state. Can be true/false or a function that returns true/false.

fn - Function to be called. It will be passed (action, selection) where:

action is the action object defined

selection is the selected object and you will mainly want selection.data for the row context.

action - String name of the views function to be called on click. This is a shortcut instead of fn: this.functionName. See fn for the parameters passed.

template - Simplate to be used instead of the List views listActionItemTemplate property.

security - String or function. If defined it will be passed to the App.hasAccessTo() where that string will be compared to the array of secured actions. If it is not found in that list it will return false and the action object will be disabled (unless the array of actions is empty, in which it returns true for all hasAccessTo requests).

scope - object, if defined and has fn defined the fn function will be invoked with the scope as the this property of the function. If not defined it will use the current view as the scope.

Enabling List Actions

Even with createActionLayout defined there are still two flags to be on the List view in order to enable action items to be display:

allowSelection to true; and

enableActions to true.

The first flag lets the view know that when a row is clicked it is making a selection and to keep track of any selections made. The second flag signifies that this view has actions and it adjusts various CSS classes to show the icon next to each row.

These two flags can also be sent via navigation options to the list views to disable/hide the actions. This is used in all lookup fields because when making a selection it should show these actions.